Total Members Voted: 75
Voting closed: 10/19/2023 09:04 pm
...If I'm wrong, I would be shocked if it was within the next decade.
so much one would need to project forward:* Many more launch sites ...
I think it would be possible to get Starship ready to do 1000 flights per year by around 2028 but I don't think it will actually do that many flights because I don't think there will be enough payloads. Sure a Mars colony can use a virtually unlimited amount of payload but I don't see where the money for those payloads would come from in the near future. I voted "after 2040" but "never" is also quite plausible - I don't know whether SpaceX will evolve Starship gradually or build a new rocket.
Quote from: deltaV on 10/07/2023 01:10 amI think it would be possible to get Starship ready to do 1000 flights per year by around 2028 but I don't think it will actually do that many flights because I don't think there will be enough payloads. Sure a Mars colony can use a virtually unlimited amount of payload but I don't see where the money for those payloads would come from in the near future. I voted "after 2040" but "never" is also quite plausible - I don't know whether SpaceX will evolve Starship gradually or build a new rocket.Propellants is cheap.
That may be true, but unless SpaceX produces its own or purchases it (like it's doing now), there could be a potential supply chain issue manufacturing and delivering that much. Let alone environmentalists generating issues with the huge amount of methane being burned and released into the atmosphere (for initial launches).
Quote from: Zed_Noir on 10/07/2023 05:34 amQuote from: deltaV on 10/07/2023 01:10 amI think it would be possible to get Starship ready to do 1000 flights per year by around 2028 but I don't think it will actually do that many flights because I don't think there will be enough payloads. Sure a Mars colony can use a virtually unlimited amount of payload but I don't see where the money for those payloads would come from in the near future. I voted "after 2040" but "never" is also quite plausible - I don't know whether SpaceX will evolve Starship gradually or build a new rocket.Propellants is cheap.My Opinion: That may be true, but unless SpaceX produces its own or purchases it (like it's doing now), there could be a potential supply chain issue manufacturing and delivering that much. Let alone environmentalists generating issues with the huge amount of methane being burned and released into the atmosphere (for initial launches). Off soap box.
1000 Starships per year is 1.6 GW, the size of a large nuclear power plant (http://large.stanford.edu/courses/2022/ph240/beardslee1/). That's probably not enough to matter from an engineering standpoint - that's about 0.16% of the US gas consumption and launch pads are invariably on the coast where shipping liquid natural gas is easy. But it could be politically problematic for a few dozen Mars residents to be consuming more energy than the entire countries of Ethiopa (112M people) and Congo (96M people) consume in electricity. If you put Starship in the list of ~220 countries sorted by electricity consumption (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_countries_by_electricity_consumption) Starship would be in the top half! I'm guessing that if rockets launch this frequently they will probably be forced to use carbon neutral propellants, which could raise propellant costs by an order of magnitude (not sure exactly).
<snip>Edit 2What this also made me realise is how mind bogglingly rich Elon is, and how much you can do with a trillion dollars.